How the Quantum Eraser Rewrites the Past | Space Time | PBS Digital Studios

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  • čas přidán 9. 08. 2016
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    Causality is meant to move in one direction: forward. But the Quantum Eraser experiment seems to reverse causality. How and why can this happen and what are the implications of this experiment on how we understand Quantum Mechanics and our greater universe?
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    A Delayed Choice Quantum Eraser
    Kim, Yu, Kulik, Shih & Scully, 2000, Physical Review Letters v.84 p.1
    arxiv.org/abs/quant-ph/9903047v1
    Previous Episode on Can We Survive the Destruction of the Earth? ft. Neal Stephenson
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    Episode written and hosted by Matt O’Dowd
    Made by Kornhaber Brown (www.kornhaberbrown.com)
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Komentáře • 8K

  • @paolocannizzaro11
    @paolocannizzaro11 Před 3 lety +458

    This is the most absurd thing I've ever tried to wrap my head around in my entire life. Thank you

    • @alxmtncstudio2066
      @alxmtncstudio2066 Před 3 lety +3

      Same.

    • @GameChanger77
      @GameChanger77 Před 2 lety

      This describes my thoughts perfectly xD

    • @mariatpena7638
      @mariatpena7638 Před 2 lety

      Its true

    • @paolocannizzaro11
      @paolocannizzaro11 Před 2 lety

      @@madcow5833 Thank you for this

    • @hurmzz
      @hurmzz Před 2 lety +3

      Why take anything down because it has been debunked? There is still usefull information here and it shows the process of science. There is also nothing on the internet that has an obligation to be truthfull to you.

  • @lazergurka-smerlin6561
    @lazergurka-smerlin6561 Před 7 lety +3039

    Dammit i told you the universe wasn't ready for offical release yet.

    • @ZNotFound
      @ZNotFound Před 7 lety +194

      The universe has't been officially released, this is a leaked version.

    • @hyperboria
      @hyperboria Před 7 lety +39

      just like no man's sky :/

    • @nonamae2009
      @nonamae2009 Před 7 lety +50

      I'm just glad we're not getting all the 404 errors that plagued the first leak.

    • @lazergurka-smerlin6561
      @lazergurka-smerlin6561 Před 7 lety +20

      nonamae2009 oh god i don't want to be reminded of those

    • @PhilieBlunt666
      @PhilieBlunt666 Před 7 lety +10

      +Smerlin and i had beeb told we were out of beta and releasing on time...

  • @sock2828
    @sock2828 Před 3 lety +46

    I really like the transactional interpretation for explaining this. In it particles only appear after a three part process where an emitter sends out an offer wave (psi), then receives confirmation waves (psi*) from every possible future absorber and non deterministically "chooses" a single confirmation wave, which then creates something almost like a standing wave in spacetime that transfers energy, spin, momentum, etc from emitter to absorber. Which we perceive as a particle at a timelike interval. The mutual atemporal interaction between both emitter and detector is required for a particle to exist in the first place.
    So when you have entangled wave packets moving through the delayed choice experiment, as a single offer wave, the potential properties of "future" particles stemming from that offer wave are basically doled out to suitable absorbers in the system as you measure. Which explains all the seemingly retrocausal weirdness.
    Which is also why when you measure the spin of an entangled particle the spin of the other instantly changes. The possibility of it being one or the other became finalized as soon as it was measured since measuring itself is what caused potential properties to manifest from possible ones into actual events at timelike intervals.

    • @hillarysemails1615
      @hillarysemails1615 Před rokem +4

      This comment is criminally underappreciated.
      1k likes from me to you.

    • @Blacksoul444
      @Blacksoul444 Před 5 měsíci +1

      @@hillarysemails1615 Sir. You are not authorized to give 1k likes here. We restricted your contribution to a number of 1 like.

    • @hillarysemails1615
      @hillarysemails1615 Před 5 měsíci

      😆😁😇@@Blacksoul444

  • @2serveand2protect
    @2serveand2protect Před 3 lety +33

    You are 100% right about that one - quote: "Physicists DO LOVE a good MYSTERY!" ...even more than answers!
    PS. ...maybe that's why each answer they provide us with discloses a 100 new questions...

    • @douglaswinters9695
      @douglaswinters9695 Před 2 lety

      I like to tell kids learning physics is like fighting a hydra

    • @khalilrahme5227
      @khalilrahme5227 Před 2 lety

      @@douglaswinters9695 every time you cut a head, another 2 show up sprout in its place ?

  • @parakmi1
    @parakmi1 Před 7 lety +4279

    When you are not looking at it, this comment describes the answer to the quantum eraser problem.

    • @mr.orca3251
      @mr.orca3251 Před 6 lety +140

      *insert elitest comment saying how wrong you are*
      p.s. I hav no idea

    • @usuario6638
      @usuario6638 Před 6 lety +27

      Hahahahh

    • @jorgensenmj
      @jorgensenmj Před 6 lety +47

      Every time I look it must be invisible. It must be outside the range of human senses. Can my dog see it?

    • @roshantiwari5442
      @roshantiwari5442 Před 6 lety +56

      i got a reason to stare at my phone with my eyes closed.

    • @GuyI9000
      @GuyI9000 Před 6 lety +5

      Parakmi I lol good one :)

  • @EGarrett01
    @EGarrett01 Před 7 lety +112

    ...yeah. I'll be watching this one a few more times.

    • @andrewbutler4822
      @andrewbutler4822 Před 7 lety +24

      I feel you brother, this shit is too valuable not to learn

    • @lizardking5237
      @lizardking5237 Před 7 lety +29

      I don't know how I got this far in life not knowing this. I'll never look at the world the same way again, innocence lost. I feel so much older and wiser knowing this. I'm ready to take on the world now, look out world I know some real shit now. I don't have a clue what the fuck it means, but I know it :)

    • @JM-us3fr
      @JM-us3fr Před 7 lety +4

      I'm on my 5th go

    • @ABQSentinel
      @ABQSentinel Před 7 lety +1

      You have to watch this many times because the meaning keeps changing. ;)

  • @maazkattangere8690
    @maazkattangere8690 Před rokem +19

    It took a while but after seeing it multiple times and really thinking about it , It breaks your mind!

  • @hermanessences
    @hermanessences Před 3 lety +19

    I love how the presenter, with his facials expression, is also like "What?? This doesn't make any sense", lol

  • @dgafbrapman688
    @dgafbrapman688 Před 4 lety +1275

    I remember opening and closing a fridge and every time wondering if the light was always on..then i found the button switch and the magic died forever.

  • @daepicadam7358
    @daepicadam7358 Před 6 lety +51

    "Could it get any weirder? This is quantum mechanics. So, yeah." That made my day.

  • @alxmtncstudio2066
    @alxmtncstudio2066 Před 3 lety +45

    I'm both profoundly shocked, and in wonderland. This is fascinating and provoking. Everything I love in life, thank you for uploading all those videos

  • @shreeshchhabbi
    @shreeshchhabbi Před 3 lety +11

    Mindblowing. This looks to be the most complex problem to root cause. This is where rational understanding has to be leveled up.

  • @physicside5764
    @physicside5764 Před 5 lety +297

    Proof that universe has a parental control," You're are not that evolved to take this yet".

  • @Laff700
    @Laff700 Před 7 lety +146

    You kinda represented the data in the study wrong. The pattern that is created by the double slit experiment doesn't change when you turn any of the detectors on or off. The reason why they talked about the pattern changing was they used the detectors to create a list of which photons went through which slit. They were able to get an interference pattern when they only looked at the data of photons which went through one slit. When the data from both slits is put together the pattern disappears.

    • @pbsspacetime
      @pbsspacetime  Před 7 lety +148

      This is absolutely right. We glossed over some details, but will expand on this in an upcoming video.

    • @PiercingSight
      @PiercingSight Před 7 lety +33

      This is super important information, especially when it comes to interpreting what the results mean.

    • @SemperAugustusBubble
      @SemperAugustusBubble Před 7 lety +6

      Lol you call that "some details"? You should be ashamed to call yourself scientists.

    • @ryanbeattie9591
      @ryanbeattie9591 Před 7 lety +62

      +SemperAugustusBubble Dude, they are going to talk more on it in a later video, wait for that before you say shit like that

    • @PSNCopy
      @PSNCopy Před 7 lety

      hahahah

  • @bmillerbiop
    @bmillerbiop Před 3 lety +10

    Here’s some food for thought: Perhaps the central illusion here is the passage of time (in the before-during-after sense). Einstein and others have posited the notion of “block time” or “block universe” in which past, present, and future are concurrent.
    To this I would add that, rather than “parallel” universes/realities, such a block universe might contain all possible trajectories and events in superposition - in other words, the firing/ slit passage/ measurement is all just one unitary event. Moreover, the detection display also exists in both wave and particle (and other?) format concurrently - the one emerging trajectory being the one that is observed/attended to (sort of in the way that a sculptor “attends” to particular molecules in a block of granite to reveal a statue).
    In this scenario, there need be no wave function collapse (physical alteration). It would simply be the “collapse” or focus of attention by the observer on one possible trajectory.
    An interesting/challenging implication of this would be that the appearance of cause-and-effect is also illusory - simply being events and phenomena that co-emerge when one particular world line is attended to.
    The above might also illuminate the perennial question “do people have free will?” Along any particular world-line set, the opportunity-choice-outcome is one concurrent, co-emergent phenomenon. Yet the fact that we have a double-slit “paradox” suggests that choice is involved in regard to which world-line set the observer attends to.

  • @MichaelNiles
    @MichaelNiles Před rokem +7

    I love this so much; in throwing out the Copenhagen Interpretation in favor of Everett's MW Interpretation this seems a much simpler effect - when we effectively entangle with this system determines whether or not we see a double-slit pattern or an interference pattern recorded. If we entangle with the system at the point of the two slits then our later measurement will absolutely be one where photons moved through one slit or the other. We've already opened Schrödinger's box and it's state is now defined because we've entangled with it. However if we don't open Schrödinger's box, we don't entangle with the system until after the double-slit filter, then it's state won't be defined until it's measured at the detector - causing the box to open and it's state finally defined as our interference pattern.
    Both results are absolutely the result of entanglement. It just depends on when we become entangled with it. If you measure the pattern after we entangle at the point of the double-slit you'll get a double slit pattern; if measuring the pattern is your point of entanglement you'll get the interference pattern.
    The absolute hidden beauty of this experiment is that it proves that WE entangle with this experiment's system and will do so for every other experiment we devise.

    • @fullsendkylewilldoitagain420
      @fullsendkylewilldoitagain420 Před rokem +1

      Each like gets us closer to home time travel 😂

    • @andrewclimo5709
      @andrewclimo5709 Před 3 měsíci

      Nice reply. See mine above. That's the nub, isn't it? The observer has to be entangled with each particle. But is it before or after? There's something going on with apparent determinacy at the point of interaction.
      Collapsing the wave function is really poor terminology. Decohering target entanglement through interaction would be more accurate. This implies reversing the interaction could recohere an entangled state, which seems sensible.

  • @thatonekid464
    @thatonekid464 Před 4 lety +331

    Its like the universe is preventing the existence of a paradox

    • @tylerdurden3722
      @tylerdurden3722 Před 4 lety +17

      Maybe the screen becomes the detector...and influences whether a particle is reflected or passes through.
      Voila, no retro-explanation required.
      That makes me wonder🤔. What would happen at the eraser end if the Which-Way polarizers are added?

    • @Hallowed_Ground
      @Hallowed_Ground Před 4 lety +33

      Exactly. That's why I believe time travel has no paradoxes, because from the universe's perspective there is no such thing.

    • @fabriciopereira9366
      @fabriciopereira9366 Před 4 lety +8

      @@Hallowed_Ground And what if we are the universe and do not end in the tip of our fingers?

    • @injunsun
      @injunsun Před 4 lety +12

      @@fabriciopereira9366 You have it there. There is no such thing as "separation." We are all, everywhere, everywhen, part of that which began as One, then expanded, to try to understand what it meant to be not alone.

    • @dblockbass
      @dblockbass Před 3 lety +3

      Man, this was part of the start of a very weird journey. 4 years later still weird and getting weirder

  • @gewamser
    @gewamser Před 7 lety +130

    This is by far...the most important program you have ever done.

  • @diskdrive123
    @diskdrive123 Před 4 lety +11

    "You can't detect something without messing with it but we found a way to detect it without messing with it"

    • @vibaj16
      @vibaj16 Před 4 lety +5

      until we realized that the universe doesn't want to let us win

    • @iseetreesofgreen3367
      @iseetreesofgreen3367 Před 3 lety +6

      Because when C or D detect it we don’t know which slit it came through, so yes it was detected but the detection was “erased” by the quantum eraser which unmessed it up

  • @lordfein
    @lordfein Před 4 lety +50

    It seems to me that part of the problem is our illusion of time moving in one direction. It seems more like time happens simultaneously, as dual causality is also a thing, where the past affects the future and the future affects the past. While I will admit my math skills are a little weak to prove this, I do think the answer to this conundrum lies in our perspective of time.

    • @michael5764
      @michael5764 Před rokem +8

      That makes sense, especially when you consider that photons are supposed to have no time. So playing around with them in our time may just mean for them that different body parts of the whole four dimensional existence is touched in their single moment which is it eternity for it (excuse the metaphorical time words for a non-time being photon)

    • @abhishekjain6452
      @abhishekjain6452 Před rokem

      ​@@michael5764so photons are this 4d all knowing entity that exist everywhere in time. Sounds so far fetched. Infact continuity of time itself breaks down and all math that derives itself from this continuity. 😅.

  • @theunironicpeasant4266
    @theunironicpeasant4266 Před 5 lety +422

    "Physicists hate being outsmarted by the universe." 😂

    • @nickolasgaspar9660
      @nickolasgaspar9660 Před 5 lety +3

      wll physicists outsmarted their selves.
      This interpretation is based on a logical fallacy.
      arxiv.org/pdf/1112.4522.pdf

    • @ethhics
      @ethhics Před 5 lety +6

      @@nickolasgaspar9660 Quantum Mechanics are based on empirical data anyways.
      Shortly said: It is made up from theoretical facts.

    • @nickolasgaspar9660
      @nickolasgaspar9660 Před 5 lety +1

      @@ethhics Sure, but the interpretations of the quantum eraser is factually wrong.

    • @nickolasgaspar9660
      @nickolasgaspar9660 Před 5 lety +2

      ​@@ethhics btw ''theoretical facts'' is an oxymoron. We use facts to construct our theories.

    • @Liquid-Lithium
      @Liquid-Lithium Před 5 lety +1

      Yet the universe kicks everyone's teeth in after the experiment.

  • @HM-rc7nn
    @HM-rc7nn Před 4 lety +130

    Hello simulation runners. Just a humble request to fix the bug before it gets wider attention.

    • @kyjo72682
      @kyjo72682 Před 4 lety +14

      Agents have been dispatched.

    • @redpillsundayschool6450
      @redpillsundayschool6450 Před 4 lety +2

      Simulation is defined as hypocrisy, meaning your mind is perceptively the only source of any simulation. So fix yourself first, attack the source. Hypocrites at least know they are simulating, but the ignorant simulator is a hypocrite without realizing, without understanding of that which is the correct path. Which is more dangerous? Legalism creates simulators, which are controlled by elite hypocrites.

    • @mikeconrad1183
      @mikeconrad1183 Před 3 lety +2

      Ok I will go fix it

    • @MrHHVV
      @MrHHVV Před 3 lety +13

      It is not a bug, it is meant to be this way so that the computer can save some ram by not having to render something real within the program unless it is being observed

    • @huhuu7093
      @huhuu7093 Před 3 lety

      @@MrHHVV hahaha, good one....wait what?!

  • @shaun4537
    @shaun4537 Před 3 lety +2

    The detector affects the particle, it has to slow it down which sort of irons out the interference pattern into 2 bands. It has to because no matter how many particles you send through the slits they will only ever hit the detector behind the slit, but the interference pattern suggests that there is a possibility of a particle can hit where band 7 is or band 1

  • @DreadEnder
    @DreadEnder Před rokem +8

    Yesss I knew it!!! I heard of an experiment like this where a wave instantaneously transformed into particle only when observed but no one knew why, and I thought that maybe the method of observing the wave/particle influenced how the wave/particle acted but I could never find anything else on it for years ( I was 8 when I first heard about the experiment )

    • @Anonimowany1
      @Anonimowany1 Před rokem

      Sadly this experiment and most channels are lying to you. Watch Sabine Hossenfelder who debunks their bullshit.

    • @DreadEnder
      @DreadEnder Před rokem +1

      @@Anonimowany1 I know, but the concept remains the same in that by viewing or measuring an experiment you may affect the outcome and even if the methods used in this experiment are outdated it’s still an interesting concept

    • @timpowers6876
      @timpowers6876 Před rokem

      The double slit experiment

    • @DreadEnder
      @DreadEnder Před rokem

      @@timpowers6876 yes… that’s what it’s about…

  • @capisenior
    @capisenior Před 5 lety +715

    Damn programmers, trying to make performance optimizations that end up being noticed.

    • @JZSIX
      @JZSIX Před 5 lety +57

      Simulating a quadrilion photons as a wave is exactly how simulations are programmed

    • @creeplyjohnson6195
      @creeplyjohnson6195 Před 5 lety +57

      @@JZSIX very creepy stuff.. seems to point to the universe being a program with subatomic optimizations.

    • @ajcook7777
      @ajcook7777 Před 5 lety +14

      Hey I know Matt says it's like the wave function goes back in time if we are looking at it. However, I know that there are beam splitters and prisms being used, I know that light actually slows down when it goes through a prism, would it possibly be the reason that it looks like it goes back in time is actually just some of the light being slowed down by going through the prism and some of it 'hits' the detector without being interfered with (compared to the light that goes through the prism?)

    • @taichiwinchester1102
      @taichiwinchester1102 Před 5 lety +31

      If there is a way to observe a large number(let's say 1%) of all photons then we are essentially stress testing the universe.

    • @educationalvideos4151
      @educationalvideos4151 Před 4 lety +28

      @@taichiwinchester1102 Crash the simulation!

  • @zac3392
    @zac3392 Před 4 lety +399

    “An entangled pair...”
    I had surgery for that in 9th grade...

  • @dianagibbs3550
    @dianagibbs3550 Před rokem +1

    Two thoughts today. 1) I wish my mom was still alive so I could share this stuff with her. She'd love it. 2) If a particle is just a wobble in its field, some mixture of pilot wave theory and the Copenhagen interpretation is easier to intuit. The wave isn't propagating through time - it just _is_. Time is just another dimension, after all. What the 'measurement' does is tap the wave-function so that it bursts all at once like a bubble. What looks like causality propagating through time is an illusion caused by our perception of time. It's no weirder for the collapse to propagate backward in time than it is for it to propagate sideways in space. I don't know if I'm explaining it very well, but it makes more sense to me now than it did 6 years ago when I watched this the first time.

  • @sean..L
    @sean..L Před 5 lety +771

    Alright then, keep your secrets.

    • @bethanyudonome4219
      @bethanyudonome4219 Před 4 lety +5

      Philosophical implications came to my mind when they talked about splitting photons. Are we supposed to have photon halves?

    • @benl8962
      @benl8962 Před 4 lety +21

      @@bethanyudonome4219 How so? were not supposed to have anything. Things just are, photons are photons and by splitting them were not violating any laws of physics or anything

    • @bethanyudonome4219
      @bethanyudonome4219 Před 4 lety +1

      @@benl8962 also by cloning you're not violating any laws of physics. I said a moral dilemma, not a physical law. Morals, Ethics- do you have any?

    • @benl8962
      @benl8962 Před 4 lety +23

      @@bethanyudonome4219 yeah alright, but you havent answered my question. Why is it a moral dilemma to split a photon? Nobody gets hurt by doing so....

    • @benl8962
      @benl8962 Před 4 lety +19

      @@bethanyudonome4219 like wtf, you are questioning my morals because i dont see a problem with splitting photons?

  • @Pupsi
    @Pupsi Před 5 lety +213

    In the quantum eraser experiment, say we increased the distance from the double slit to the A/B and C/D detector setups to let's say 10 light minutes to a light year and put a 50/50 probability fission event at the end (like in Schrödinger's thought experiment) to choose which of A/B or C/D setup to use and which to move out of the way or block.
    What patterns would we observe at the interference screen?
    Could we predict the future 10 min / a year ahead, predict the fission event by observing a pattern on the nearby interference screen?

    • @QED_
      @QED_ Před 5 lety +36

      @Pupsi: Yes, why isn't that an obvious question to ask (?) What's the answer (?) Let's say it takes 1 second for the particle to reach the interference screen . . . but 5 seconds to reach detectors A and B. So what appears on the interference screen at 2 seconds (?)

    • @Pupsi
      @Pupsi Před 5 lety +33

      @@QED_ I might be wrong on this one but I think it's not possible to extract any conclusive or.. "predictive" data from the interference screen at shorter time frames. I'm just guessing the way the experiment is actually done is to shoot individual particles one at a time for a long period and then compile a BIG amount of data at the end to see the patterns from the chaos. One particle hitting the interference screen won't tell anything, it'll just look like a random point. The time to shoot enough particles and to process the data from the interference screen needs way more time than 3 seconds (5 sec - 2 sec) IF the experiment is done this way. Don't know how else it would be done though.
      So what appears on the interference screen at 2 seconds? I'm thinking it seems just random at THAT moment..... until long long after when the data analysis is done

    • @MalcolmBlk
      @MalcolmBlk Před 5 lety +21

      @@Pupsi Well suppose in theory we could increase the time to reach detectors A and B to over the time it takes to fire enough photons, then what?

    • @Disected
      @Disected Před 4 lety

      @@oaksnice please title

    • @Callie_Cosmo
      @Callie_Cosmo Před 3 lety +6

      I believe in multiverse theory, so instead it’s causal, if we would ever eventually detect which slit it went through, we are forced down the ‘no interference pattern’ branch, and if we don’t, then we’re forced down the ‘interference pattern” path, no backwards time travel information for me here unfortunately

  • @guillaumemaurice3503
    @guillaumemaurice3503 Před 3 lety

    WOW that was amazing! Thank you for sharing this video, I really enjoyed the topic.

  • @chowderhead1337
    @chowderhead1337 Před 3 lety +2

    I keep coming back to this video.

  • @beretperson
    @beretperson Před 7 lety +276

    What the actual fuck universe

    • @MatthewSmith-sz1yq
      @MatthewSmith-sz1yq Před 6 lety +14

      For some reason this seems to somewhat support the "simulated universe" theory, where our universe is a simulated one, and it does not simulate to the quantum level, instead reverting to computational "shortcuts". It would actually simulate things with more detail when it is being observed, I.E. when we are testing it. I feel like these differing results are the result of the universe going into a sort of "low-resolution" mode, similar to many games only rendering the things the player is looking at, and replacing textures with simpler, less intensive textures at larger distances. Of course, this entire thing is a theory, and simply being capable of wondering if we are in a simulated universe may prove we are not in one... my brain hurts!!!

    • @XxPx3xNx6xUx1xNxX
      @XxPx3xNx6xUx1xNxX Před 6 lety +4

      Hey Matt, that is 100% what I've thought for most of my life. I've said it many times but have never worded it in such an easily digestible way as you did. Very nice.

    • @jenniferschober3027
      @jenniferschober3027 Před 6 lety +2

      how does being capable of wondering prove that?

    • @jeremyphelps5140
      @jeremyphelps5140 Před 6 lety +1

      Matthew Smith it's not a theory, it's a hypothesis. It's also an untestable hypothesis, so think about it all you want but I wouldn't invest too much into this idea. Also us being able to think about something is not evidence. It's like when religious people say that since the idea of God is in our head therefore God exists. It's circular logic and bad science.

    • @Mutation80
      @Mutation80 Před 6 lety +2

      no worries, its just a glitch in the matix

  • @Vialect
    @Vialect Před 5 lety +42

    Quantum Mechanics:
    1. Build the experiment from your brain
    2. The experiment will now build your brain
    3. Blow your brains out

  • @peterb9481
    @peterb9481 Před rokem +1

    By now it is apparent that this episode is not quite right.
    The splitters registering at A and B only destroy the interference pattern.
    Those at C and D also destroy it. For each (C or D) you only get half a pattern.
    When you combine these patterns for C and D you get the patterns for A and B.
    Therefore the arguement of going back in time / re-writing the past is not made out.
    This is shown by Sabine Hossenfelder in one of her CZcams videos.
    Sean Carroll also makes reference to this point.
    A similar arguement is also made in Jim Baggott’s Book ‘The Quantum Story’ chapter 33.
    It may be worth doing an update for this episode (assuming not done already).
    Love this channel so much ❤❤❤❤❤

  • @mArs0x0h
    @mArs0x0h Před 4 lety +3

    What if after your interference screen displays a wave, you block one path that makes the erasing possible? Would then the particle that hits the interference screen be a wave and the one that hits the detector be a particle, or would a wave pattern never occur in the first place because the particle "knows" about your intention?

  • @neoepicurean3772
    @neoepicurean3772 Před 5 lety +141

    Wow, this is mind blowing, I always wanted to know what Peter Dicklage would look like if he wasn't a dwarf.

  • @humanrightsadvocate
    @humanrightsadvocate Před 5 lety +597

    How is this _not_ a glitch in the Matrix.

    • @letsbehonest4221
      @letsbehonest4221 Před 4 lety +38

      Because it deliberately let us observe it.

    • @jorgepeterbarton
      @jorgepeterbarton Před 4 lety +8

      there aren't agents knocking on your door
      simulations and programs follow reality I guess, rather than the other way around, since maths is a core property of not just the universe but existence itself...or at least they could...so you've really got to leave your intuitions about living 'in code'

    • @letsbehonest4221
      @letsbehonest4221 Před 4 lety +10

      @@jorgepeterbarton not realy
      Maths is just the way humans thing.
      Dogs and cats dont know of mathmatics nor does a planet or a star yet they existed before humans invented maths...

    • @JavenarchX
      @JavenarchX Před 4 lety +1

      This is exactly what I was going to write...

    • @pawnriot3269
      @pawnriot3269 Před 4 lety +53

      gotohell Mathematics is not exclusive to humans. We just define it better. If you put 1 piece of food on one side of a dog and 2 pieces on the other side, which side do you think the dog will choose to go? Even if animals don't realise it, they are doing maths. Maths is just a language used to apply logic. Since logic is a fundamental requirement for self-awareness, it is a core property of the universe. For example Boltzmann brains can spontaneously come into existence purely by entropic chance.

  • @dyjhhffgjjjhgf9512
    @dyjhhffgjjjhgf9512 Před 4 lety +1

    Looks like the devs are patching every glitch/broken game mechanic we find instantly. Best devs ever.

  • @themanofiron785
    @themanofiron785 Před 2 lety +1

    Let's try it like this:
    Entangled particle A arrives at the screen, which detects if it's an interference pattern or a particle. It sends that information to the half-mirrors at the detectors. If it is an interference pattern, it makes the system swap them with 100% reflective mirrors.
    Particle B's path is set up with mirrors so that it takes a detour and gives enough time for the above to happen. It then finally arrives at the full mirrors, so they always get reflected into the detectors that actually record the which-way information.
    So now, you have an interference pattern and you also know the which-way information.

  • @kaito2005
    @kaito2005 Před 7 lety +10

    Of all the things I've learned from Space Time, this one blew my mind!

  • @culwin
    @culwin Před 5 lety +79

    Houseplants can observe us.
    Thanks for letting us know.

    • @JeanPierreWhite
      @JeanPierreWhite Před 2 lety

      If you've read "The Day of the Triffids" you already knew this.

  • @slartibartfast1268
    @slartibartfast1268 Před 2 lety

    The clearest illustration (via animated graphics) of the delayed choice and quantum eraser experiments I've seen yet.

    • @Langkowski
      @Langkowski Před 2 lety

      This video is pretty good too: czcams.com/video/0ui9ovrQuKE/video.html

  • @johntracy72
    @johntracy72 Před 4 lety +5

    It's like the particles/waves know they're being watched.

  • @YuTe3712
    @YuTe3712 Před 7 lety +56

    How the what does the what?!
    Probably the most curious title yet!

    • @YuTe3712
      @YuTe3712 Před 7 lety +18

      ... By the end of the video, I had far more questions than I came in with. =_=

    • @mozillafirefox1111
      @mozillafirefox1111 Před 7 lety +4

      +YuTe3712 That's science for ya

    • @SomeGuy1117
      @SomeGuy1117 Před 7 lety +10

      +YuTe3712 That's the fun part of quantum mechanics.

    • @xPROxSNIPExMW2xPOWER
      @xPROxSNIPExMW2xPOWER Před 7 lety +2

      its just faster than light information exchange which he says re-writes past maybe. tl:dr if you will

    • @frankschneider6156
      @frankschneider6156 Před 7 lety +1

      +YuTe3712
      That's not untypical for science

  • @davidczajkowski5956
    @davidczajkowski5956 Před 4 lety +20

    My new found favorite Space Time topic. I’ve watched this video three times (minimum needed for me to fully comprehend all of Matt’s brilliant insights). Hope to see more regarding this in the future.

  • @oremazz3754
    @oremazz3754 Před 3 lety +8

    Be careful... In the Delay choice quantum eraser experiment, interference patterns observed at D0 are not the same, they are shifted at position x. If you add both data you would have the clumping pattern observed at D3. The clue is that entangled photons at BBO are phase opposite, which will give at 4 combinations arriving at D0 (25% each: up-up, up-down, down-up, down-down); basically, 50% of that "red path" photon will have the same phase of the "blue path" and 50% chance opposite phase between them. That is the reason why interference patterns are shifted in x, 50% of the data will show one interference and 50% of the other data will interfere on the other position x; the high frequency of one interference coincides with the low frequency of the other; and vice versa. Now, on D3 or D4 there is no selection between phases, so the pattern observed is the addition of the two shifted interference pattern shifted on x, so... the interference will be mixed and the clumping pattern is expected. In D1 and D2 the difference or equality of phase will give only one detector for the same phase interference and the other detector for the opposite phase situation. So, on D1 and D2 interference patterns are independently observed. NO delay choice and quantum eraser from the future to the present !!

    • @jaredgarbo3679
      @jaredgarbo3679 Před 3 lety +1

      So what your saying is...

    • @oremazz3754
      @oremazz3754 Před 3 lety +2

      @@jaredgarbo3679 Interference continues, no delay choice ad seen by D1 and D2. The confusion is given by D3 clump pattern, which is also an interference pattern BUT is not seen because it is the addition of both interferences ( D3 = D1 + D2 data). The clumping pattern is due to shifted highs and lows of each interference which "dilutes" the high - lows. NO time weirdness, no future acting the past, JUST interference all the time, seen clean on D1 - D2 and diluted on D3 - D4. The clue is entangled photons by BBO crystal and the alternating mixture of them. Hope this is more clear to you, Regards

    • @oremazz3754
      @oremazz3754 Před 3 lety

      Di, D2, D3 graph can be seen very clearly on video czcams.com/video/u9bXolOFAB8/video.html BUT he doesn't explain why. The reason is the combination of phases by entangled photons

    • @EdgarZomboss-zu2ls
      @EdgarZomboss-zu2ls Před rokem

      Totally agreed. This video is MISLEADING, and trying to SENSATIONALIZE the experiment in a very unscientific way. I'm totally disappointed.
      The interference patterns were NOT observed directly at D0. They are COMPUTED by a coincident counter, by associating ONLY photons captured at D0 with those captured at D1 or D2. There's no rewriting of the past implied by the result of the experiment.

    • @IrishBeerCan
      @IrishBeerCan Před rokem

      I would have been very upset if I was paying attention between the time this experiment's results were published and it being debunked. Reading about the quantum eraser drove me mad for a few days. I was starting to rework my entire world view.

  • @TheDemigans
    @TheDemigans Před 3 lety +1

    I know that FTL communication is impossible, I hear it at every turn from people who put way more thought into it, but it remains fun to speculate:
    Imagine you can extend the time before decoherence happens to hours or even years outside of a laboratory.
    Set up a quantum eraser experiment. The detector screen is a space ship/colony hours or years away. The light going to the eraser is bounced around for a bit longer than it's counterpart before its send to its detector/eraser component.
    You send out enough fotons in one burst to discern an interference or band pattern. These are counted as bits: Interference patterns are the 0, band patterns are the 1.
    The system is continuously sending bursts at speeds similar to modern computers.
    Now give control over the mirrors to a computer. For each 0 the computer lets the fotons bounce into the erasor part creating an interference pattern. For each 1 the computer bounces it into the detector.
    Add a specific pattern each time no input is given by the computer so it can be recognized.
    The decision which one is an interference pattern and which one is a band pattern is made at almost the same time as the interference pattern reaches the ship/colony.
    On the space ship/colony they detect a series of interference patterns and band patterns which are translated into bits and into messages. While it took the fotons hours or years to reach it, the information created within is made almost at the same time.
    Now someone explain to me how this would still not work, because there is always a reason but people rarely give an actual explanation when I ask why.

  • @srcclouston
    @srcclouston Před 4 lety +38

    this is one of those videos that I'll have to watch several times. :/

    • @Ray2311us
      @Ray2311us Před 3 lety

      nah, its a bunch of bologna and you know it!

    • @Ray2311us
      @Ray2311us Před 3 lety

      We are unable to single handedly compute all that we know because not only can our processor not handle it but our memory bank along with our ability to observe it in open tabs just like a computer does, is very minimal ( unless you are obsessed with it and disciplined enough to study it day and night which I have yet to do properly ).

    • @Ray2311us
      @Ray2311us Před 3 lety

      it's not easy to organize the mind in terms of folders, because our subconscious does that job on its own.

    • @baruchben-david4196
      @baruchben-david4196 Před 3 lety

      I was thinking the same thing. I'll have to watch this a few times...

    • @alxmtncstudio2066
      @alxmtncstudio2066 Před 3 lety +1

      I spent half the day at it, and I'm still at it.

  • @MilesLougheed
    @MilesLougheed Před 4 lety +65

    Schrodinger's window:
    It is both snowing and not snowing until you look through the window. It's how I survive the winter.

  • @miketout
    @miketout Před 3 lety +9

    I'm wondering if the Wheeler-Feynman Emitter/Absorber Theory could possibly help explain this. Is there any chance that we are seeing interference patterns across the time dimension in these experiments?

  • @massimilianoleoni7314
    @massimilianoleoni7314 Před 4 lety +7

    I'd like to ask a similar question to one that was asked before. Using detectors AB to determine each photon's path results in no interference. You mentioned that this happens even if the photons hit the screen before their entangled twin gets to the detectors. What does the screen look like in that time interval? It should have an interference pattern as the detection is in the future and might as well not happen. But after the detection it will have only the two clusters. Does it change?

    • @jameskappes9893
      @jameskappes9893 Před rokem

      It doesn't work that way because the interference pattern you see is from firing single particles over time, Impossible to tell with only one because in reality of the "Interference screen" in real time would show up at 1 dot, you can't see if its a interference pattern or blob with only 1 dot on the screen. In theory lets say one dot didn't show up as a dot and magically showed up as the information of Pattern or Blob, I wonder if it would actually "re-write" time if you could see the screen before the twin reaches the detector and then what the screen says after it actually hits the detector, if it would change. The universe has no business changing the position of particles while your looking, seeing the screen just turns YOU into the detector and oops you collapsed the wave function just by observing it instantaneously, that's what's weird here. It doesn't rewrite time or what happened, with observation collapsing the wave function its impossible, the question you should be asking is, when your not observing are the particles really there or do they just choose to be there when you observe, which ties into these new videos they have about "does consciousness create reality/the universe" so the weird thing is, consciousness/measurement/observation because you can't have measurement without consciousness I consider them all to be the same or alike, if you consider machine measurement to be the offspring/branch of biological/conscious measurement. It was created by it and can only form from it or an observer in our case (us hoomans). So since they are the same they play by the same rules so cameras are like branches of us, forms of measurement discovered/created by us so that's why the universe will still lol "boot in" even when your not there looking and only a machine is, but if its Not a measuring device, who knows if its really there or not. Makes you feel special, if you understand, anyways the key variable in the quantum eraser is the half silvered mirrors, if your Giving each particle the choice of 50% pass or reflect didn't you technically just make another which way "double slit" but in a different way? why not use the special crystals in place of the Half silvered mirrors? Because then it would create two particles from one, the quantum eraser experiment is worthless but the Which way experiment is amazing.

  • @WestonHettinger
    @WestonHettinger Před 4 lety +284

    Someone should try the quantum eraser experiment with large distances, and see exactly how far they can go to demonstrate non-locality.

    • @TimberWolfmanV6
      @TimberWolfmanV6 Před 4 lety +50

      Weston Hettinger makes no difference.. a photon (relatively speaking) only ever appear at their destination instantaneously.. so even the ones that to us have taken millions of years to travel from source to get to us over vast distances .. for the photon this is irrelevant .. relativity! 😉

    • @TimberWolfmanV6
      @TimberWolfmanV6 Před 4 lety +21

      Donald Piniach .. that’s ok.. it’s just relativity.. as you approach the speed of light (c) time slows down, so imagine if you were actually able to travel at “c” time would effectively reach “0” .. time just stoops.. & stays stopped for you until you reach your destination... but for people living on the surface of earth your journey could have taken millions of years (in earth time)
      Here’s a cool video that might help:
      czcams.com/video/AqRQ_93kFKs/video.html

    • @TDrudley
      @TDrudley Před 4 lety +26

      @@TimberWolfmanV6 But, I was told you can do this experiment with protons and other non electromagnetic things. If you do it with protons it should not work the same way since you can't send a proton at the speed of light, thusly time moves for them... Very slowly, but still.

    • @rupakrokade
      @rupakrokade Před 4 lety +14

      @@TimberWolfmanV6 I don't understand why distance will not matter. Speed of light is insignificant on a galactic scale. We just have to dealy the second photon long enough to confirm.. even a few nanoseconds would do.

    • @TimberWolfmanV6
      @TimberWolfmanV6 Před 4 lety +18

      rupak rokade .. no delay for the photon whether it appears a billion light years from source -or- if it appears only a meter from source .. both from the perspective of the photon are instantaneous regardless of distance.

  • @kevinlaity5931
    @kevinlaity5931 Před 7 lety +238

    Suppose I lengthen the path that leads to A,B,C, and D using a pair of fibre optic cables wrapped around the earth 449 times (should be 1 minute to travel at the speed of light).
    I arbitrarily switch the paths to C and D on and off. Have I created a system that can send a message 1 minute into the past, by watching for the interference pattern and assigning a 1 or 0 based on whether I see one or not?
    But then, if I receive a message like '10101' and one minute later I decide to invert my message and send '010101' instead, haven't I broken causality?

    • @VSR813
      @VSR813 Před 7 lety +36

      Kevin Laity that's a very good question, I've been wondering the same. any comment from other physics folks round here?

    • @TheMikeyTrumpet
      @TheMikeyTrumpet Před 7 lety +11

      Could you also use entangled pairs as a type of 'switch'? I.e. If the particle hits an area that would normally be in an interference peak, make the switch spin one way to indicate 1, and store that info. If it hits an area that would normally *not* be in a peak (i.e. indicating noise), make the switch spin a different way to indicate 0. Collect all of the responses and see if they match up to the final result on the screen - is it an even amount of 1s and 0s to indicate detection, or does the data show an interference pattern but the screen show noise?

    • @bramheesenarmwrestling
      @bramheesenarmwrestling Před 7 lety +41

      I don't think you would receive "10101" in the first place, because you later changed it to "010101". This experiment should be done though, even if it's a much smaller scale.

    • @demon212
      @demon212 Před 7 lety +46

      entanglement cannot be used to send messages, both particles must be measured first

    • @tbayley6
      @tbayley6 Před 7 lety +24

      As far as I know the measurements on the entangled photon have no effect on the pattern. Or else you could have instant FTL communication between two distant locations by placing the light source half way between them. In fact I believe there is no interference pattern overall in this experiment, which can be explained if entanglement is physically equivalent to measurement. The patterns related to 'erasure' at C and D are obtained by looking only at photons corresponding to just C measurements, or just D measurements. You have to have the measurements to know which photons to look at. The sum of these patterns (which is all you have in the absence of that information) is not itself an interference pattern.

  • @brandonmtrujillo
    @brandonmtrujillo Před 2 lety

    Really great explanation Matt. One of my favorites.

    • @beemercycle
      @beemercycle Před rokem +1

      Matt lied to you. The conclusions that Matt presents have been debunked.

  • @MrofficialC
    @MrofficialC Před 2 lety +23

    This experiment might get WAY crazier if you did compounded experiments in series(and maybe in parallel or series parallel if you want to get even crazier) and made a rather large punnet square to analyze the results. For instance if you did a regular double slit experiment with 2 crystals put one after another to make the 2 original slits into 4 entangled particles per slit and then ran those 4 particles into differing versions of the experiment i think that that might produce a result that would ultimately find the double slit experiment to be even weirder than originally thought or it might give the different results of the punnet square you made more clarity.

    • @MrSpock-sm3dd
      @MrSpock-sm3dd Před 10 měsíci

      It will probably still gonna give the same results but yet still worth trying

    • @kael7953
      @kael7953 Před 7 měsíci

      Then Agent Smith will come knocking on your door.

  • @keeganlacroix5673
    @keeganlacroix5673 Před 7 lety +79

    Last time I was this early the universe was still orange

    • @CoalOres
      @CoalOres Před 7 lety +14

      This is actually good.

    • @maj.peppers3332
      @maj.peppers3332 Před 7 lety +9

      Woah, this is the only clever one I've seen

    • @ismaelochoa6
      @ismaelochoa6 Před 7 lety

      I don't get it. 😢

    • @frankschneider6156
      @frankschneider6156 Před 7 lety +2

      +Ismael Ochoa
      orange = visible wavelength, that's a LOT less red shifted than the 3K radiation of today. A LOT less red shifted cosmic background radiation means a LONG time ago.

    • @burntheships
      @burntheships Před 7 lety

      best comment I've read in a long time!

  • @AnaseSkyrider
    @AnaseSkyrider Před 7 lety +329

    I swear: Quantum physics is just a giant middle finger to anyone who wants this shit to make any kind of sense.

    • @samo4003
      @samo4003 Před 7 lety +41

      Scientists just love the middle finger from nature. It is what spurs them on to achieve the impossible.

    • @FinalManaTrigger
      @FinalManaTrigger Před 7 lety +27

      God is trolling hard.

    • @danf2
      @danf2 Před 7 lety +10

      God reminds brilliant minds just who their daddy is in a spiritual sense.

    • @neeneko
      @neeneko Před 7 lety +6

      Pretty much yeah.
      QM is like trying to read a book where you can only see half the letters of a word, one word at a time, and you only get to look at a single page once.

    • @Zawse612
      @Zawse612 Před 7 lety +7

      and the book is in another language that no one knows how to read it...

  • @lorvincent
    @lorvincent Před 2 lety

    I think for the first time I'm beginning to understand entanglement half-decently. Thank you. I know the video wasn't really about that, but this experiment just kind of made it all click in my head.

    • @platzpropeller858
      @platzpropeller858 Před 2 lety

      Well then im sorry to tell you but this video is just clickbait
      Try "The delayed choice quantum eraser, Debunked" by Sabine Hossenfelder here on YT
      She is an actual scientist and will explain why this video is just total nonsense

    • @lorvincent
      @lorvincent Před 2 lety

      @@platzpropeller858 I watch Sabine s lot. I've also read Feynman's lectures. I'll go watch Sabine's vid, but it wasn't the quantum eraser that made it click specifically. It was everything prior to that, and how it mixed with previous content from Feynman, mostly. Sabine is great though.
      Edit: watched Sabine's vid and funny enough this was my original assumption on how it worked. If he meant it actually "changed the past", I misunderstood and took that as a simplified shorthand. To elaborate on what I got out of this in a quick way, waveform collapse is similar to measuring a single vector out of n vectors that make up the wave. A useful (but inaccurate) way to think of this is as if we measured x vector, but we can understand it was measurable due to n - x vectors making up the wave.

  • @Kobay350
    @Kobay350 Před 2 lety +1

    So if you were able make that first half mirror turn on or off meaning that we actually changed between measuring which slit it went into or sending the beam into the quantum eraser. Would the screen on the other end instantly switch between showing an interference pattern vs not showing that? Or does the action of switching if we are measuring the beam have some affect on this?

  • @theseeker3771
    @theseeker3771 Před rokem +1

    Thankyou.... you explained this complex topic in a wonderfully easy to understand way. Thanks so much. I am delivering an audio presentation on this soon and you have really helped me out.

  • @robinwallace7097
    @robinwallace7097 Před 5 lety +195

    doesn't that just prove special relativity? I mean, the entangled pair, moving at the speed of light, experience zero time, so that when one behaves as a particle and then the other does as well, they are not changing retroactively because no time as passed for them, only us.

    • @theludvigmaxis1
      @theludvigmaxis1 Před 5 lety +42

      I agree. I’ve been thinking about this stuff for a long time. I think were onto something. The particles almost certainly experience zero time in my opinion it’s the most logical conclusion.

    • @teddybreihan
      @teddybreihan Před 5 lety +42

      first time ive read this explanation for it, and i gotta say that makes a ton of sense. surprised more people havent talked about this

    • @varunnrao3276
      @varunnrao3276 Před 5 lety +22

      This is invalid afaik, as even though they are not evolved in time, the distance between them has increased. If you and your friend are imitating each other and suddenly you both are accelerated at the speed of light in opposite direction and are taken far away from each other, you will have no idea you are travelling or anything has changed, but the moment we stop you from your point of view you friend will no longer be able to imitate you, So there is no way your solution *completely* solves the problem. Again this is only my understanding and I can be wrong.

    • @varunnrao3276
      @varunnrao3276 Před 5 lety +88

      And again electrons also exhibit this property and they are not going at the speed of light.

    • @nehamotwani6477
      @nehamotwani6477 Před 5 lety +9

      If somebody can explain this....
      The observation thing is still confusing for me. Is it our knowledge about the observation that decides the outcome? If so then what if, in this experiment, the outcomes on these detectors are observed by some conscious person who don't know what to interpret form it. Will the path information be considered as known or unknown. How the result might come in this case. Please clear this doubt.

  • @oscill8ocelot
    @oscill8ocelot Před 7 lety +84

    "Without the nonsense mysticism" - I love you so much.

    • @monsterlair
      @monsterlair Před 7 lety +17

      I just wrote almost the exact same comment. I love you too now.

    • @stage274
      @stage274 Před 6 lety +2

      I am sorry, we have operating quantum computers, and from their operation, it seems the correct answer is the multiple worlds interpenetration. That the particle going through the second slit, is a particle located in another dimension. And not to mention Dr. Hammeroffs work, he had shown, the bing in consciousness is the collapse the the wave function in Micro Tubules. I know there is not a lot of transnational research, however there should be. Photo synthesis, cannot operate without QM either.

    • @lancetschirhart7676
      @lancetschirhart7676 Před 5 lety +1

      @@stage274 In the multiple worlds interpretation, there is no wave function collapse :/

    • @ClassPunkOnRumbleAndSubstack
      @ClassPunkOnRumbleAndSubstack Před 2 lety

      Ironic.

  • @rivertaig8703
    @rivertaig8703 Před 3 lety +18

    What if we "partially erased" the knowledge of which slit the photons went through? I'm thinking with a fancier set-up, instead of it being 50-50 which slit the photon passed through when when detector C lights up, we could modify the odds so that we were 60% sure it was slit A. Would the interference pattern still show up? What about at 80% or 99%. Presumably at 100% assurance (no quantum eraser) the interference pattern is not present. So I think the logical question is how do we move from no interference pattern to complete interference pattern - all at once or gradually? If gradually, is it linear or some weird function?

    • @Rudxain
      @Rudxain Před 2 lety +3

      I think it should be possible to have a continuum like you said, because qubits work the same way. When you measure the spin of an electron across whatever axis you want, the probability of collapsing the spin "up" or "down" depends on the angle of the underlying spin. So if the actual spin is 45° relative to your measurement axis, there's a 75% probability of collapsing to "up" and a 25% collapsing "down". A 90° angle gives you a balanced 1/2 probability for both outcomes

    • @172ngan8
      @172ngan8 Před rokem

      Can I asked, what if A and B detectors were placed with a longer path than the target screen. Now lets run it 1) without the eraser and 2) with the eraser, what are the outcome?

  • @dauntless64
    @dauntless64 Před 4 lety

    Thanks for waiting Matt. Much appreciated.

  • @Madridy1996
    @Madridy1996 Před 7 lety +338

    Quantum physics: the science that makes no sense at all and gives you the middle finger saying deal with it bitch......

    • @Cams250
      @Cams250 Před 7 lety +24

      Like religion

    • @Madridy1996
      @Madridy1996 Před 7 lety +11

      +Cams250
      Thanks for this unpredicted twist, we will transfer you to someone who gives a damn....

    • @Cams250
      @Cams250 Před 7 lety +3

      +Madridy1996 Lol you mad? the example is ironic.

    • @Madridy1996
      @Madridy1996 Před 7 lety +1

      +Cams250
      You had to bring it didn't you!

    • @Cams250
      @Cams250 Před 7 lety +7

      Madridy1996 Round one, FIGHT!

  • @carlossibrian1053
    @carlossibrian1053 Před 5 lety +3

    I came across this in Brian Greens book, The Fabric Of The cosmos. Had a hard time understanding it there. But thanks to you it’s crystal clear now.
    Thank you

  • @aquamanGR
    @aquamanGR Před 2 lety +2

    FYI: the "quantum eraser" experiment has since been debunked. It might be nice to note it in the description.

  • @bj97301
    @bj97301 Před rokem +8

    That’s crazy. Has anything changed regarding this recently? Would it be worth revisiting this?

    • @schmetterling4477
      @schmetterling4477 Před rokem

      No. ;-)

    • @tomusic8887
      @tomusic8887 Před rokem

      It's debunked....see sabine hossenfelder here on you tube...there is no hocus pocus at all.....

    • @Posesso
      @Posesso Před rokem +2

      Well, it did happen that Sabine Hossenfelder made a video debunking this interpretation, same experiment. The actual one does not suggest time travel. To which Matt replied saying 'Yes, you are right. Thanks for addressing the issue because I was aware our old video is incorrect but could not find the moment to make a video to fix it'. I expect PBS Space Time to upload such video at some point in the future :)
      Sorry, I also was a bit disappointed :)
      czcams.com/video/RQv5CVELG3U/video.html

    • @bj97301
      @bj97301 Před rokem +1

      @@Posesso you rock. Thank you for the detailed reply. ❤️

    • @schmetterling4477
      @schmetterling4477 Před rokem

      @@Posesso Sabine Hossenfelder makes videos about all kinds of bullshit. ;-)

  • @Var_and_Cheese
    @Var_and_Cheese Před 5 lety +42

    "Perhaps, this thing we call observation is just entanglement between the observer and the experiment."

    • @yourmomismyepicmount35
      @yourmomismyepicmount35 Před 4 lety +3

      nope its entanglemnt with the observer,experiment,particle so that means its reverse results of the outcome it validates through the experiment..

    • @agranero6
      @agranero6 Před 4 lety

      You are close. See this talk: czcams.com/video/dEaecUuEqfc/video.html the title "The Quantum Conspiracy: What Popularizers of QM Don't Want You to Know" is purposely ironic, but the talk is serious. Near the end you will see a good explanation. But not entangled with the observer per se, but the experimental setting. No consciousness is required (no Depak Chopra stuff is needed), for that see this article: arxiv.org/abs/1009.2404 "Quantum mechanics needs no consciousness (and the other way around)"

    • @smrtfasizmu6161
      @smrtfasizmu6161 Před 4 lety +3

      @@agranero6 This talk is made by a guy who is not even a physicist and represents the fringe interpretation of quantum mechanics. It is like Alex Jones talking about quantum mechanics.

    • @agranero6
      @agranero6 Před 4 lety

      @@smrtfasizmu6161I was only concerned with his explanation of the quantum eraser experiment that is clearer and not so "pop resumed" as all pop talks of physics we see. But: 1. As I said the title is a joke. There is no conspiracy and he don't intend that there is one. 2. It is a consensus between Physicists, that conscience is not needed for explaining QM: arxiv.org/abs/1009.2404 (aka von Neuman-Wigner interpretation is bullshit, and the other way around Penrose theory of conciousness too). This is way more than reasonable. 3. What he says is that what he claim is so trivially assumed without noticing that is not usually considered by physicists. 4. There are several articles by "real" physicists describing this idea or variations of it: arxiv.org/abs/1905.09978. arxiv.org/abs/1905.09978

    • @agranero6
      @agranero6 Před 4 lety

      @@smrtfasizmu6161 PS: you can say that any of the 40 or so interpretations that are not the Copenhagen interpretation are fringe interpretations. All my teachers except two never ever discussed any other or allowed discussion in class of any other.

  • @jakobygames
    @jakobygames Před 7 lety +24

    what about time dilation from the point of reference of the photon? moving at the speed of light, a photon must not even feel the effects of time, so an entangled photon being detected should effect the other photon no matter the time, right?

    • @eurybaric
      @eurybaric Před 7 lety +3

      That's an interesting idea I'd like to hear some input on that!

    • @RoboBoddicker
      @RoboBoddicker Před 7 lety +8

      The effect works the same for massive particles, so that doesnt really apply. Besides, even if photons themselves experience no time, they still take time to propagate in our reference frame

    • @maestroanth
      @maestroanth Před 7 lety +3

      Oh man, I just typed my comment and then saw this one! Haha, we're thinking the same thing!! *high five*

    • @mitchellfream5647
      @mitchellfream5647 Před 7 lety

      I'm a little late on this one. IIRC no observer can move at light speed, so the idea of "from the photon's perspective" doesn't really make sense.

  • @Final14Final
    @Final14Final Před 2 lety

    Okay hear me out on this one b/c I think we're almost there! (I understand the logistics of this would be nearly impossible but bear with me and assume we could do it, is my logic sound?)
    Setup:
    1) Put detectors A and B on the moon so it takes approx 1.3 seconds for the photons to get to the detectors.
    2) Have entangled super-positioned particles on both earth and moon (you'll see why later)
    2b) Have detector power for A and B linked to the super positioned particle so that when it comes out of super position it will turn on the power for the detectors.
    Experiment:
    We then pass the photons though the double slit w/ crystal to split them into an entangled pair and observe the pattern on the screen.
    The magic is that we then have 2 options at this point :
    If we notice an interference pattern, we measure the super positioned entangled particle from setup step 2B which collapses super position both here and on the moon faster than the speed of light and the moon detectors A and B gain power and we say GOTCHA to the universe b/c we can figure out which slit the photon passed through AND have an interference pattern.
    If we don't notice an interference pattern, then we can collapse a wave function without even measuring it, which is SUPER WEIRD and at minimum advances our understanding that even the possibility of being able to measure a photon collapses it's wave function even if we don't actually measure it..... and since we never measured the entangled particle from setup step 2B the detectors stay off and never measure the entangled pair.
    ELON MUSK --- GET ON THIS! LOL

  • @timthorson52
    @timthorson52 Před 4 lety +1

    I wonder if we could build a system that delays the "observation" of the photon long enough to see either the interference pattern or particle interaction and then attempt to measure the path of the particle/wave based upon whether we saw an interference pattern. Essentially bounce a particle around for a few milliseconds inside a system that we cannot measure the path, then once we observe the type of pattern on the screen we observe the path of the particle or choose to not observe the path of the particle by making it pass through something that loses the possibility of determining the path.

  • @felixdammrau788
    @felixdammrau788 Před 7 lety +54

    What would happen if you only had detector A (only detect photons of one slit). What happens with the photons going through the other slit (B)? Would they act as if they were detected since you know they were going through slit B because detector A didn't light up or would you see an interference pattern?

    • @pbsspacetime
      @pbsspacetime  Před 7 lety +51

      Funny story: this is actually what they did. In the original experiment the researchers didn't bother with detector B (or D3 in the paper). However in order to isolate the photons that traveled down any given path you need coincidence electronics connected to both the screen and the detector. That means that, without detector B, photons associated with that path a indistinguishable from any hits on the screen due to background photons or screen detector noise. However if you could somehow eliminate the noise then theoretically any photons not hitting A, C, or D must have traveled down the B path. That's which-way knowledge, so should leave a non-interference pattern.

    • @BadgersEscape
      @BadgersEscape Před 7 lety +6

      So... what if you can't eliminate all noise, but you can give noise an upper bound? Say that you know that less than 10% of the photons hitting the screen is noise. Would you gradually get a more non-interference like result as that percentage approaches zero..? Because surely you can make some estimation of this bound under any well controlled circumstance (even though the percentage might come out high if this elimination is hard to achieve)? Basically: wouldn't it be possible to calculate this upper bound even for experiments that *did* show interference patterns? Implying a gradual transition for the observed results? (We have a bound on how many photons we have which-way knowledge for - but we don't know *exactly* which of the photons we have that knowledge on - only a percentage of total photons.) Interesting implication would be that the amount of noise is directly related to what pattern would be observed.

    • @monoham1
      @monoham1 Před 7 lety +2

      +PBS Space Time how can you rule out the rule of averages in this is you don't do it with one photon in a magnetically isolated vaceum at a time? the effect could be caused from the screen sending information through the entanglement link or just at light speed with photons or magnetic waves?
      on the other hand, if the outcome is retroactive, dies that mean it changed from one outcome to another? was it a wave pattern one instant and a blob the next? is it possible that happened because the link transferred existing and inevitable outcome data and not physical information that can be affected by c ?

    • @monoham1
      @monoham1 Před 7 lety

      +monoham1 err i mean to say, or if the result in the screen and the detection in the detectors happened at the same instance is it possible the information went fatter than c?

    • @felixdammrau788
      @felixdammrau788 Před 7 lety +1

      Thanks for clearing that up (and also for mentioning it again in the latest video :) ). Sounds super weird but also plausible at the same time^^ I always thought in order to collapse the wave function you have to directly observe the photon. But obviously the information about which path it took is enough since that means you no longer have a set of probabilities.

  • @PauloAndreAzevedoQuirino
    @PauloAndreAzevedoQuirino Před 7 lety +28

    Dude it's simple. If the position of the electron needs to be defined, it is. As a particle, it only makes sense that it doesn't interfere with itself, so it doesn't. If it doesn't need to be a particle (if we don't measure it), it can interfere with itself, so it does, like a wave.
    The universe is like a dream striving to make sense.
    If you dream about some specific thing, it appears in your dream, but does the universe of your dream contain other things you haven't considered? In my view, if you look for them, either they exist or not, if you don't, it is undefined.
    If you like the simulation hypothesis, you could argue that things not being defined when they don't need to to save computational power. If that were the case, from my point of view, only what my senses perceive needs to be simulated at a given time. If i'm outside, a skybox follows me around. Haha. Actually that wouldn't be enough, skybox dynamics don't allow for a universe that makes sense. But, a simple universe like that could make sense to a child that doesn't know anything! Yes, but it wouldn't make sense as he/she/it grows older, and learns about the wind, and stuff. The universe needs to make sense back and forth in time, so maybe that is very memory inefficient lol, not like a computer game in which you compute events sequentially, you would have to know past present and future at the moment of experience.
    Yes yes we are all asleep in Zion...
    ARGUE WITH ME, SCIENTISTS! I salute you.

    • @sicfxmusic
      @sicfxmusic Před 7 lety +19

      Man you need some medication and a place to live

    • @PeterDavey
      @PeterDavey Před 7 lety +6

      O.K. I can talk hypothetically, how about this for a theory...
      Question with theory, does all that material passing to outside of the universal event horizon, (the edge of the observable universe) cease to physically exist because there is now no way of proving its existence and so the materials are collapsed back to their wave like existence? then the expanding universe isn't getting physically any bigger just expanding from internally out to the edge and therefore I assume all the energy that crosses the universal event horizon gets recycled for use in expanding the currently existing space in an infinite cycle? using similar principles to quantum entanglement the energy could re-emerge anywhere its needed in the observable universe and universal energy is conserved. No big-bang now just the impression of one & an eternally existing finite universe? does this sound feasible? and then totally out of my understanding can a new theory of Dark Energy be uncovered by this Idea?
      Now I'm wondering how the C.M.G. fits into this picture?
      More pondering to do....

    • @PauloAndreAzevedoQuirino
      @PauloAndreAzevedoQuirino Před 7 lety

      Carl CIFER Can i live in your pants?

    • @PauloAndreAzevedoQuirino
      @PauloAndreAzevedoQuirino Před 7 lety

      Peter Davey Hm i don't know much about all that, but it sounds pretty interesting xD

    • @PeterDavey
      @PeterDavey Před 7 lety

      Paulo Andre Azevedo Quirino
      Me either, I just thought of it & decided to throw it out there.... I made it up, lol.

  • @vj.joseph
    @vj.joseph Před rokem +1

    I was thinking, the same experimenters did delaying the detector landing after the pattern detection. What happens if we reversed it?
    I did know that real particles will know if time is reversed, thus the clock gets broken. The symmetry ensures that the information is carried back in time, through virtual patticles. Another idea is that the observer is using rougher technique for detection while light remains smaller than it.

  • @atandritabhattacharyya3882

    It just blew my mind. Quantum physics and it's applications in molecular r electronic structure determination have always been my interest. Thank you for making a video on such a beautiful topic. Keep it up.

  • @kidmohair8151
    @kidmohair8151 Před 5 lety +66

    two particles are having a secret affair
    negative particle: meet you on the other side
    positive particle: only if no one sees us

    • @illiakailli
      @illiakailli Před 4 lety

      physics.stackexchange.com/questions/490828/can-there-be-interference-between-a-proton-and-an-electron

  • @criticalpoint7672
    @criticalpoint7672 Před 7 lety +164

    This tells you that the Universe operates from outside the boundaries of time. Time is something that exists only for us, not for the "place" from which the laws of physics are emerging. Time exists for us because we are subjected to the laws of physics, but the laws of physics are not subjected to the laws of physics so they are not bound by time the way we are. That is why information can go apparently backwards and forward in time, because it is not subjected to time, but creates the time effect for us, it does not obey time, it generates time.

    • @igotbandTHEFROG
      @igotbandTHEFROG Před 7 lety +25

      lol no

    • @criticalpoint7672
      @criticalpoint7672 Před 7 lety +21

      Exude
      lol yes

    • @JeremyMcCandlish
      @JeremyMcCandlish Před 7 lety +5

      The study of physics defines itself as looking for timeless agents, since those are the ones with predictive power...no need for experiments to "tell us" that one :P
      "Time exists for us because we are subjected to the laws of physics"
      Umm...? Time exists for us because the information we receive is not identical with the information driving the actions of the world
      (i.e. precisely because our minds are "subjected to" something other than the laws of physics...however that works)

    • @lizardking5237
      @lizardking5237 Před 7 lety +3

      WOW, dude that's some heavy shit, man I gotta sit back and think about that one :/

    • @lizardking5237
      @lizardking5237 Před 7 lety +4

      blob darkass When a tree falls in the forest and there's no one around, does it make any noise ?

  • @jamieedmonds574
    @jamieedmonds574 Před 2 měsíci

    The simplest way to interpret the data from these experiments is that this apparent Physical Matter Reality (PMR) that we live in/experience is actually a Virtual Reality (VR), and like any VR game you might play on a computer, there is a basic physics rule set, and there are probability distributions of the possibilities that govern what can happen and the likely consequences of the actions/choices of the players (think of playing Dungeons and Dragons and rolling to hit). Every possible outcome is governed by a probability distribution until the character rolls the dice, just like the next room in the VR game is not rendered by the rendering engine UNTIL the player opens the door or walks through the portal. 😎
    The electrons or photons (and they've replicated the experiment using molecules as large as Fullerenes, 60 carbon atoms arranged in a sphere called "Buckyballs") exist only as a probability distribution (the interference pattern) until the "player looks", and this specific "which way data" causes a random draw from the probability of the possibilities and the result is rendered on the screen - - it went through THIS slit and landed in THIS band, either the left one or the right. As long as the which way data is not available, you're still holding the dice in your hand, the screen shows the probability distribution (interference pattern) and there is no result rendered until it is called upon.
    Check out Tom Campbell's new QM experiments to try to validate his VR theory. 🙏🏻
    www.my-big-toe.com

  • @cobaltusa
    @cobaltusa Před měsícem

    This is Awesome. Such a wonderful rabbit hole to go down. Thank you

  • @wellplayed6061
    @wellplayed6061 Před 7 lety +204

    Even the universe gets stuck with spaghetti code

    • @garethdean6382
      @garethdean6382 Před 7 lety +87

      Jesus saves, but God doesn't debug.

    • @sergiogarza2519
      @sergiogarza2519 Před 7 lety +2

      Wow. That response is amazing.

    • @AlienXtream1
      @AlienXtream1 Před 7 lety +1

      then i guess the other guy hits the delete key :P

    • @stlkngyomom
      @stlkngyomom Před 7 lety +1

      Sounds like string theory,James Gates...and digital physics Ed Fredkin,Nick Bostrom,Sandra Postel,Tom Campbell Bruce Lipton interview,Pam Grout,

    • @cclifford1003
      @cclifford1003 Před 7 lety +1

      LOL

  • @arcon97
    @arcon97 Před 6 lety +170

    Why did the photon cross the slit?

  • @awfulcasual1787
    @awfulcasual1787 Před 2 lety +2

    This video blew my mind so hard that I decided to go back to school for a physics degree

  • @rkaminsk1
    @rkaminsk1 Před rokem +3

    So what if the detectors are one light hour away from the slits. And they are not even attached. The person operating them will attach them or not - depending on his/her mood. What are we going to see on the screen through this hour? Will the image change after the remote person's action or decision? If so, how much time it will take?

    • @boontecklee592
      @boontecklee592 Před rokem

      This is exactly what I wanted to know too. It just made me feel that the experiment results as given by this and other similar videos are not entirely true. So far we are only seeing videos and explanations from third parties. Where is the video of the actual original experiment? Why are they not available?

    • @172ngan8
      @172ngan8 Před rokem

      @@boontecklee592 How do they win the Nobel price without something to convince people, that's weird. I agreed with you. All these video only true in a particular case.

  • @vagmcpan6007
    @vagmcpan6007 Před 5 lety +28

    Yep, definitely need a patch release for this part of the simulation! For now the creators use a cheat a=b LoL

  • @ThePunkPatriot
    @ThePunkPatriot Před 7 lety +50

    I think the reason for the interference pattern may deal with the fact that for a photon, time essentially doesn't exist-- it occupies all points along the path of travel simultaneously from it's own frame. The entire path of the photon should be dealt with like a standing wave. I'm trying to figure out how to run the timeline backwards as well, placing the detection as the causal origin point and the laser as the end point, and then derive what the result would be for the wave if the particles were traveling backwards and forwards in time and space simultaneously (to create a sort of "standing wave" situation).
    I don't have a background in the math necessary to do this or to understand if this is even a dumb question or not.

    • @calebkirschbaum8158
      @calebkirschbaum8158 Před 7 lety +6

      That is brilliant. This could be done, I believe. Do you mind if I talk with some of my professors?

    • @ramyhhh
      @ramyhhh Před 7 lety +10

      But the same goes for electrons which (as said) experience time

    • @calebkirschbaum8158
      @calebkirschbaum8158 Před 7 lety +15

      Ramy Hanano electrons actually don't move at the speed of light. about 99.9% but not exactly. theorecticly, if something moves at the speed of light, it does not experience time.

    • @ThePunkPatriot
      @ThePunkPatriot Před 7 lety +3

      oh right, and buckyballs as well... hmmmmmmm

    • @ramyhhh
      @ramyhhh Před 7 lety +6

      That's what I'm saying ... electrons experience time because it does not move at the speed of light, yet the interference pattern (and wave function thing) are applied though

  • @amrithatalks1103
    @amrithatalks1103 Před 3 lety

    I just want to thank Siddharth for the making me feel " special" part.. Fun apart THANK YOU!

  • @odairfernandes1912
    @odairfernandes1912 Před rokem +22

    "Sabine, this is amazing. You are, as usual, 100% right. The delayed choice quantum eraser is a prime example of over-mystification of quantum mechanics, even WITHIN the field of quantum mechanics! I (Matt) was guilty of embracing the quantum woo in that episode 5 years ago. Since then I've obsessed over this family of experiments and my thinking shifted quite a bit. And then I procrastinated on filming the retraction! Thanks for laying it out more clearly than I could have. I have some thoughts to share that might add one more nail to the coffin ... coming to a video real soon!"

    The comment above was posted by PBS on the video...
    czcams.com/video/RQv5CVELG3U/video.html

    Was the "retraction video" posted by PBS Space Time already?
    If so, could you provide me a link? (I couldn't find it).
    If not, can you tell when you will post it?

    • @odairfernandes1912
      @odairfernandes1912 Před rokem +2

      ​@@erawanpencil
      Hello!!
      Thank you very much for your gentle reply.
      I, also, write a lot sometimes (LOL).
      I agree with you on what you said on your text.
      I like Matt's videos. For sure he does a great job.
      I like Sabine, too (with some precautions).
      I think she is wrong on what she said about quantum eraser.
      I thinj that YES, the past can be re-written (not the way some people think, but the Universe really re-write the past whenever it is necessary).
      I will see something about Sabine x Kastrup. I saw some headlines / video titles and I could realise that they disagree on superdeterminism.
      Well... when it comes to superdeterminism I think Sabine is right.
      Let's wait for what will happen on next chapters.
      Thank you once again.

    • @wiesawnykiel1348
      @wiesawnykiel1348 Před rokem +4

      Sabine's interpretation is wrong To interference in C or D information from both paths is needed ("erasing" can only cause that the photon is moving one unknown path). If in the experience instead of two BS dividing 50/50 would be inserted two BS: 60/40 and 40/60 we would have interference in C and D at 80% of the remaining 20% of photons would create a random pattern (10% in C and 10% D).

    • @gregorsamsa1364
      @gregorsamsa1364 Před 9 měsíci +3

      ​@@erawanpencilwhat political reasons forced him to lie about being "guilty of embracing the quantum woo"?

    • @gregorsamsa1364
      @gregorsamsa1364 Před 9 měsíci +3

      @@erawanpencil such 🐴 sh!t. Public figures express disagreement with women all time without facing any sort of significantly negative consequences. Not to mention that you provide no evidence that he was lying when he said that. As if any time a man expresses agreement with a woman it can then be reasonably inferred that he's actually being dishonest about his agreement

    • @celivalg
      @celivalg Před 9 měsíci +4

      @@erawanpencil the quantum eraser experiment has definitely been shown to just be a misinterpretation of the results, and she explained correctly how the misinterpretation occurs. There are extensions of that experiment that try to bring the paradox back, but they are mostly hiding the misinterpretation deeper. Not out of malice, mind you, they are just trying to break physics which is always exciting.
      The consensus is that there is no such thing as retro-causality.
      I don't really know what's up with your view of her, and Matt's comment seems pretty accurate from what I felt of his earlier videos, not out of malice, but excitement, and I agree with him that a retraction video should be made.
      I'm not gonna try and dissect every argument you made against her, you have other issues to deal with and I'm bored of misogynist pricks.

  • @Deathrox691
    @Deathrox691 Před 6 lety +34

    Man: "guys i figured out how to work around the observational collapse of a wave!"
    Universe: "Hold my beer..."

  • @atomicpressure5112
    @atomicpressure5112 Před 4 lety +13

    The universe is playing such an infinite hand of chess

  • @Swerve-Online
    @Swerve-Online Před 9 měsíci +1

    Once they tell us the observers' frequency effects the location of the particular, we'll discover how prayer, meditation, manifestation works. 🤯

  • @mrepop
    @mrepop Před 2 lety +2

    It’d be interesting if we found out that photons aren’t moving through time at all, it’d make for some interesting solutions to the causality problem.

  • @MediaSock
    @MediaSock Před 6 lety +54

    It's almost like we are experiencing time in reverse.

    • @michealcherrington6531
      @michealcherrington6531 Před 5 lety +1

      incredible revelation. how came you to it?

    • @a_diamond
      @a_diamond Před 5 lety +6

      I've wondered that..
      if we are *all* Benjamin Buttons... The reason we all think it's "normal" is because we are all experiencing the same thing..

    • @siw4576
      @siw4576 Před 5 lety +2

      Good thought. Time can travel in many directions. Humans presume it is linear and in one direction.

    • @you2449
      @you2449 Před 5 lety

      Nice idea.

    • @helenmeyer1730
      @helenmeyer1730 Před 4 lety

      The big bang has a singularity expanding out and an observable horizon.
      A black hole also has an event horizon collapsing into a singularity.
      At the event horizon of a black hole time stops and beyond the horizon time goes backwards. Hypothetically, falling into the singularity in reverse time would appear like a big bang.
      The measurement Problem = Double slit delayed choice quantum eraser experiment. It would appear that an event in the future affects an event in the past .
      In reverse time = the past is the future correct

  • @Everfall6t9
    @Everfall6t9 Před 6 lety +91

    Here's a brain buster for ya. What if using the WMAP to peer into the early visible universe, actually collapsed the wave function, and created the visible universe?

    • @Everfall6t9
      @Everfall6t9 Před 6 lety +51

      And now i'm thinking... Aren't my 2 eyes analogous to the 2 slits? So is it my brain thats collapsing the wave function every time I look at something?

    • @snacklepussPSN
      @snacklepussPSN Před 5 lety +2

      Everfall6t9 Professors of Physics still entertain the notion that consciousness collapses the wave function and Its totally untrue:
      The double slit experiment [DSE] "interference /diffraction pattern" caused by observation is BS: Prove it to yourself by doing the DSE and getting the diffraction pattern as usual:
      Now simply remove the slits: Yes remove the slits from the "experiment" but keep the partition where it was the first time: Fire the laser /photons again and guess what; you get the same results ~ a diffracted pattern which is NOT caused by "Consciousness" nor by Two Magic Slits; but simply because the light is going around the edges / passing the partition and striking the screen:
      If you dont like this information you may be brainwashed: Or havent yet tried a triple slit nor a quad slit experiment: So you will hardly attempt the simple experiment I have just stated which works:

    • @adamsavage2646
      @adamsavage2646 Před 5 lety +1

      @sk0sH I think on such small scales time acts very strange, result in strange phenomena

    • @neerkoli
      @neerkoli Před 5 lety +2

      @@Everfall6t9 Cyclops disagree

    • @garymathis1042
      @garymathis1042 Před 5 lety +4

      The universe came into existence when the first metaphysical mind observed it.

  • @Doct0rLekter
    @Doct0rLekter Před 2 lety +4

    Hey PBS Spacetime, I’m curious. I’ve been watching your videos on quantum mechanics and special+general relativity for a while and I had a question that looped me back to this experiment, but the quantum world is absurdly large so I apologize if there are any obvious misunderstandings of it on my part as I ask this question. The question is, could the results of this experiment not be explained by extra temporal dimensions allowing lateral movement through time (relative to our frame of reference of course)?
    These lateral temporal paths could create a spread of possible locations for a particle in our particular experience of the flow of time. This could (if I understand properly) also explain why the act of any distinctly “forward” or “backward” moving particle measuring a particle of unknown temporal trajectory causing the wave function to collapse. Much like particle “spin” aligns itself with the measuring device we use, since we would be measuring temporal trajectory with a collection of forward moving particles, the temporal trajectory would align forward in time in a sense causing the wave function to collapse at whatever point the particle was measured. Further, this could help explain why greater mass decreases uncertainty, as it could explain mass as a forward/backward momentum through time. The more massive the object, the more temporal momentum, and that could create inertia that helps prevent lateral movement through time.
    I actually have many other things I believe could be explained by this (dark matter could be matter that moves laterally through time by our reference frame as an example, but would be impossible for us to directly see since it would be measured with a forward/backward reference), but I was wondering if this is something that has been explored already and disproven. Or, perhaps I am positing this with such a poor understanding of the concepts that it isn’t particularly worthwhile to ask?

    • @Htrac
      @Htrac Před rokem

      "the quantum world is absurdly large" 👀

  • @SuperMaDBrothers
    @SuperMaDBrothers Před 4 lety

    This is the only good explanation I've seen. Thanks!

  • @bandrewsonp5379
    @bandrewsonp5379 Před 7 lety +444

    I don't understand, and this isn't gonna help me finish my English homework

    • @calvinphelps8786
      @calvinphelps8786 Před 6 lety +56

      Actually, when you're not looking, it finishes your homework.

    • @Thomaat116
      @Thomaat116 Před 6 lety +14

      Try to understand this subject is way better than ur English homework tho :)

    • @David-qv9yy
      @David-qv9yy Před 6 lety

      Bandrewson P look into the actual double slit experiment

    • @therugburnz
      @therugburnz Před 6 lety +1

      Bandrewson P English is descriptive so......... Describe how to understand Maths to yourself. Confuse the TA. One can get away. ......... OK

    • @ubu6949
      @ubu6949 Před 6 lety +1

      An ion is structure; 1
      An axon is potential energy; 2
      A chaon is interaction; 3
      An elementon is representation; 5
      The basic formulas look like this:
      *1+2=3
      *2+3=5
      *5-3=2
      *3-2=1

  • @levismith2103
    @levismith2103 Před 7 lety +128

    Glitch in the matrix

  • @JasonScottLucas
    @JasonScottLucas Před 3 lety

    Mind blown, thanks for the explanation sir.

  • @jameschen9430
    @jameschen9430 Před 2 lety

    The description is wrong around 6:11 of the video. If one observes a pile of scattered photons on the interference screen without an interference pattern, it means that the detector A or B has already measured one of the entangled photon pair before the interference screen observations.